Eric Pouw’s research while affiliated with Oxfam Novib and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (7)


Information and Communication Technology Companies on the Battlefield: Explanations and Implications
  • Preprint

January 2025

·

6 Reads

Eric Pouw

·

P.A.L. Ducheine

·

·

K.L. Arnold

CHAPTER 12 Information manoeuvre and the Netherlands armed forces: Legal challenges ahead
  • Chapter
  • Full-text available

December 2023

·

9 Reads

Download


Military Operations and the Notion of Control Under International Law Liber Amicorum Terry D. Gill: Liber Amicorum Terry D. Gill

January 2021

·

45 Reads

·

5 Citations

Rogier Bartels

·

Jeroen C. van den Boogaard

·

Paul A. L. Ducheine

·

[...]

·

This book is a tribute to the work of Professor Terry Gill, offered to him by friends and colleagues who are also academics and/or practitioners in the field of International Law of Military Operations (ILMO). ILMO is a distinct sub-discipline within public international law and domestic public law, covering all domains of military operations: land, sea, air and (cyber)space. As such, ILMO includes elements of other branches of public international law, such as international humanitarian law, human rights law, the law on the use of force, the law of the sea, the law of State responsibility, arms control law and the law of international organisations. Importantly, as a hybrid field of law, ILMO covers the legal basis for military deployment both nationally and internationally, as well as the subsequent international legal regimes applicable to the forces (once deployed) and the domestic administrative and constitutional issues related to the relevant forces. Control is a central notion of ILMO and is the leading theme of this book. The contributions in this book reflect the variety of legal frameworks applicable to military operations and offer an insightful view into the various legal and factual roles of control. The legal notion of control is considered, inter alia, in relation to restraints in the decision to deploy military forces and the legal basis for doing so. The impact of control is also discussed in relation to State and command responsibility and in different situations, including during peace operations, occupation and other situations of armed conflict. Additionally, control is considered over the armed forces themselves, over detainees migrants at sea and over the type or scale of force used in military operations, through targeting rules or rules of engagement. Furthermore, the book contains several discussions of control in the case law of international courts, within arms control law, weapons law and in the context of autonomous weapons systems. The editors of the book are all practitioners, academically affiliated to the Faculty of Military Sciences (War Studies) of the Netherlands Defence Academy and/or the Law Faculty of the University of Amsterdam.




Citations (2)


... Иной взгляд на войну и классификацию вооруженных конфликтов представлен в теории «транснационального вооруженного конфликта», описанной исследователем Амстердамского центра международного права Р. Бартельсом [27]. Исследователь определяет транснациональные вооруженные конфликты как «трансграничные вооруженные конфликты между негосударственной вооруженной группой, с одной стороны, и вооруженными силами государства, с другой» [17]. ...

Reference:

THEORETICAL UNDERSTANDING OF THE CATEGORY OF NON-TRADITIONAL WAR IN THE INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL AND LEGAL CONTEXT
Military Operations and the Notion of Control Under International Law Liber Amicorum Terry D. Gill: Liber Amicorum Terry D. Gill
  • Citing Book
  • January 2021

... The distinction of objects is part of the customary law and rules (described above) and applies in both types of armed conflict. (Sandoz et al. (1987), Henderson, 2009, Dinstein, 2016, Sassolli, 2017, Sassòli, 2019 Where an object serves both military and civilian functions, it may qualify as a military objective and could be legally targeted, its categorisation will ultimately be defined by its use. ...

The Conduct of Hostilities and International Humanitarian Law: Challenges of 21st Century Warfare